Being a 15 year veteran of online communities, I know that answering a question with a for-profit commercial solution, which the one responding is affiliated with, is walking a fine line. So here I go, walking that line. I'll do my best to address the question specifically. Let's start with a standard disclaimer...
DISCLAIMER: I am a principle in the service described below.
but investing the resources in writing our own library to parse the
bounced e-mails is very undesirable.
Yes, writing your own libraries is no fun for most (but us poor, twisted souls with nothing better to do), considering that the library you write or include may be considered out-dated within days of your modifications.
Does anyone know of an up-to-date set of rules for processing bounced
e-mails? I don't necessarily need any handling logic, even just an
up-to-date ruleset would be satisfactory.
Maintaining such libraries are significantly time consuming, and once it becomes significantly time consuming such libraries are often either abandoned or sparsely updated. This is usually how commercial solutions are born.
I'm a big fan of Open Source, and there is no doubt that I've personally benefitted greatly from it over the years. For the great majority of you reading this, the above options are perfectly sufficient, as many of you are capable of developing the solutions you need yourselves or modify the available tools to suit your needs, and have the time to do so.
For those of you, however, that do not wish to build your own applications, debug and troubleshoot them, update the email processing definitions consistently and often, InboxResponse.com offers email bounce processing as an SAAS solution. It is:
- Updated often and consistently
- Perfect for those of you that just want something that works
- Can be integrated into any existing mailing systems you presently use, within minutes.
- Supports delivery tracking, bounce processing, multiple levels of soft-bounce processing (temporarily undeliverable emails), unlimited mailing lists, stats, graphs, and more.
A free trial is available at the following URL: https://inboxresponse.com/free-trial/
May not have been exactly what you were looking for (an Open Source library always kept up-to-date), but I don't think exactly what you are looking for is presently available.
Hope that helps someone!